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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1963)
4 A ItEDFORO&rTUBUNI MONDAY. JANUARY 7, 19S3 MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON """Everyone in Southern Oregon Beads The ManTrlhun KbhThed Dally eicepf Saturday by MEDFORD PH1NJ1NG CO 33 North FirStPh;77a-el41 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB CREV Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM. Bus Mar ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mr,; Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CH1PMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERICKSONIrcuHUon Mgr AiTlndipendent Newapaper Tntarpd at becond class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act 01 March 3. 1807 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advance .,. Dally and Sunday-1 year $18.00 Daily and Sunday 6 moa 10.00 Dailv and Surday 3 moi. 3.00 Sunday Only- One year S5.00 Single Copy fan-lied) 40c By Camel And Motor Route. Daily and Sunday 1 year 2 .00 Dally and Sunday 1 mo. 1-75 Sunday Only 1 mo. Me Carrlei andVendora Copy 10c Official Piper of City of Medford Ofllclalrapero Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U F 1. Telephoto Newsplclurea StEMbER OF AUDIT BUREAU" MbTr'tsT NELSON ROBERTS & ASSOCI ATES Oficei In New York, Chi cago. Detroit, San Francisco, Los Angeiei. aeaiue, r u - i - Denver. Oregon and California By DON ROBINSON (Editor's note: The writer of the following essay was reared in Mcdford, attended Medford High school, and the University of Oregon. He formerly was employed as a reporter on the Mail Tribune, and now is a re porter for the Eugene Register-Guard, from which his piece is reprinted.) "This Is What You Might Call Defense In Depth" NATION A I EDITORIAL r NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson Counly History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Jan. 7, 1953 (Monday) More storms said needed to make up late fall precipita tion. Military counselling pro gram for young men and their parents established in connec tion with National Guard. 20 YEARS AGO Jan. 7, 1943 (Saturday) Four Camp White teams lake part in ice hockey league competition in Medford; games played in meaiora ice arena. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Cit izens complain the dollar is not going as far as formerly It is also coming back slower." 30 YEARS AGO Jan. 7. 1933 (Monday) Some 250 "hunger march ers" arrive in Salem from all parts of Oregon; stage mass demonstration in front of cap ital. F. V. Mcdynskl, 82, one time city councilman who was Instrumental in obtaining first water supply for city, dies at home here, 40 YEARS AGO Jan. 7, 1923 (Tuesday) "Old Timers" basketball team including Dcke Bryant, Provost and Ailken defeats Ashland High school's 1022 slate champions, 2G to 18. - Oregon Gov. Waller M. Pierce urges passage of stale income tax, favors drastic en forcement of prohibition laws. SO YEARS AGO Jan. 7, 1913 (Thursday) Rogue valley's fifth post of fice robbery in two weeks re ported from Rogue River; thieves also enter Rogue River Jewelry store, railroad depot and city hall; large number of pennies taken during two week series of crimes threat ens valley with "penny short age." Group of Iowa businessmen indicate Interest in purchasing properly near Gold Hill for construction of cement plant: group holds options on several limestone and quartz ledges near oily. The suitcase returned from vacation in Call fornia is lighter by a few Christmas presents, Heavier Dy a lew arguments on living there. While I was there the Census bureau clicked California ahead of all other states in numbers of residents. How should an individual react to that? What does a blade of grass do when its lawn be comes largest on the block? Californians, according to the papers, were supposed to herald the population triumph by blowing their car horns at noon. While I heard no one do it, that was an ironic choice of trumpet. far more than by its people Calitornia is dorm nated by masses of automobiles. So many are going to every destination Bo frequently that it has been necessary to build a treeway there. A LONG these roads rows of abutting houses crouch together like pioneer wagons formed in defense against the piston-driven Indians. These are negative parts to living in California unless you think, as few who travel there do, that Happiness is six lanes of solid traffic. To dismiss the land because of its roads, cars, and huddled houses, however, is to omit more that is positive. For instance, people in equivalent jobs make more money in California. True, they have to spend more to maintain an equivalent standard of living. It's hard to sav which wav it balances out. There is no doubt, thought, that many of the immigrants come tor better pay. "NCE you fence your way to them through the traffic, there are also superb suburban shop ping centers grand assortments of shops with a sea of blacktop parking. They can give a horse laugh to almost any traditional downtown busi ness district. In the Bay area, center of our vacation, there is the city of San Francisco. There 'are those who argue against that place and in favor of one like Eugene by citing our accessibility to peaceful lakes and glades. Well and good. But a few would argue further that whatever The City has we have too, in at least a junior-sized way. "THE latter is plaintive nonsense. San Francisco is elegant, vibrant, delightful. Take in the Nutcracker ballet or drop by the Purple Onion. Stroll past Union Square in a shopping night or through Blums' window watch the sundaes disap pear down the matrons. Drive the low-gear streets and worry about stopping but not about running out of things to do. There is no comparsion be tween San Francisco and some of the headless, charmless youngsters surrounding it (we stay ed in one, booming San Jose) that are cities in name only. Two other facts need mentioning, one bad and one good, about California. The bad first its newspapers. Probably no one cares too much. Those who are in the business overemphasize it. But in the Bay area, name your town San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley, San Jose the papers are to be wept over, not read. They have gone to serving a parfait diet of news and on it one may get bloated, but never well-informed. THE good point is the weather. California's win- tfi oiiiion 11 it 10 iv.ci. 10 ivni iii on vi niiivou the damp has affected his brain the December visitor from hmerald Lninne will gratelully ac knowledge its superiority. This does not mean the Empires six-month drizzle should be scorned out of hand. If it were not for our weather probably more of the millions who rushed to California would have rushed here. The proper conclusion seems to be that there should be a California, but there should also be an Oregon. If weather in part protects one from becoming a duplicate of the other, the difference is worth the rain. c ,--,nr irMJUtg iv fccr vunjUKt FROM TP re- Via. . .:fr.'h7iA Foreign Policy: Sino-Soviet Talks May Patch Differences; Arms Pact Discussion R PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Newt Analyst Notes from the foreign news cables: Sino-Soviet Talks? Some Western diplomats in London are speculating that secret talks have begun be tween Russia and China on ways to patch up their dif fer e nces, or are about to begin. The tern p o r a r y lull in the East -West crisis and eas- jewiom ing of tension on the Indo-Chinese frontier seemed to make this an ideal time for the two big Commu nist powers to get together and try to bury the hatchet, the diplomats said. Lending credence to this speculation was Premier Nikita Khrush chev's New Year remarks that ... Communications ... Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, annougn urmer certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissiDie. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation, Letters submits J for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper! in fact the contrary it often the case. What's Your I.Q.? Nine or ten corracl ii superior; laven or ight it excellent; five or jit Ii good. 1. What grcal occasion formerly look place on March 4 every four years. 2. In a nursery lair, who ate three bowls of porridge? 3. The names of eight stiilcs in the U. S. begin with the let ter M; name six. 4. On what ocean Is Ceylon? 5, At birth, which are lon ger an Infants arms, or logs? ft. What is Tass? 7. Name Ihe five grades of general officers of the U. S. Army. 8. What was the name of Robert Fulton's steamboat? 0. If someone offered you a pippin, what would you re ceive? 10. Is an inflationary period one In which the purchasing power of money decreases or increases? Answers: 1, Proiidenlial In auguration, 2. Goldilocks. 3. Maine, Maryland, Massachu setts. Michigan. Mississippi, Missouri. Montana. 4. Indian. 5. Arms. 6. Russian news agency. 7. Brigadier, Major, Lieutenant, General and Gen eral of the Army. 8. Clermont. 9. Apple. 10. Decreases. Boycotts The National Retail Merchants Association at its annual meeting in New York city beginning Wednesday, Jan. i), is almost certain to take up the question of boycotts. From a nation-wide standpoint perhaps the most trying of these is conducted by a Miami outfit, the Committee to Warn of the Arrival of Communist Merchandise on the Local Business Scene, with the backing of the far-right John Birch Society. This group encourages its associates surrep titiously to slip into packages containing pur chases of goods produced behind the Iron Cur tain cards bearing legends like: "Help Bankrupt America Buy Your Communist Products at . . . (inserting the name of the store)." Polish hams are prune targets. Ironically, according to the U. S. Department of Commerce, the United States exported goods worth ."JIM. 4 million to Soviet Bloc countries last year, as against $8-1.(5 million in imports from these same countries. James C. Uagcrty, vice president in charge of news for American Broadcasting Co., hud a word about still another kind of boycott recently. It came in connection with ABC's refusal to cancel a million-dollar advertising contract after Alger Hiss appeared on a television program that ex amined the political career of Richard M. Nixon. "To yield to prior censorship and the pres sures of personal attack ami economic boycott," Hagcrty said, "is to surrender the basic right of freedom of the press." -E.R.B. i t UN-Katanga To the Editor: Orchids to Frank Koch for his letter of 1483 exposing the Swed ish-American international fi nances who are allcgcdy us ing the UN Armed Forces to take over the wealth of Katanga. May I offer some further confirmation and sup porting evidence along this line. As told by Ralph Moffat on the radio program, "Let Free dom Ring", Connor O'Brien, Commander of the UN forces in Katanga a year ago, has written a book that blows the lid off the UN-Katanga mess. O'Brien states flatly that the UN account of how the Katanga war started was a de liberate falsehood, that it was NOT a defensive action, that It was a planned offensive and that it was called "Operation Morfor". "Morfor" is a Hindu word meaning "Smash!" O'Brien ought to know. He was the commander. Here is something else that will make your blood boil. Right while the bitter contro versy was raging over whether or not we should buy $100 million worth of worth less UN bonds to keep this 'great instrument of peace" from going bankrupt because of its heavy Katanga agression expenses, our Foreign Aid Ad ministration had secretly given the UN, outright, $215 million. Some of this foreign aid money was used to pay up the back dues and assessments of the very nations who are our worst enemies, reestab lishing their right to vote against us. The rest of it was used to keep the UN solvent, thereby enabling the UN Armed Forces' agression on Katanga to continue. Who was at the head of Ihe Foreign Aid Program at this time, and responsible for giv ing these "Aid" millions to the UN? As Mr. Koch pointed out, Fowler Hamilton, one of the key men in the American Swedish Combine who, it is alleged, are determined to take over the unbelievably rich Katanga mines by ex terminating Tshombe and Katanga, was Director of For eign Aid at this time. How do you like that, fellow tax payer? 1463 headlines in the Grants Pass Courier read, "UN Troops in Katanga Kill Civilians ". The civilians were two helpless women riddled by UN bullets. Gentle readers and fellow Christians. It is your money paying for the spilling of this innocent blood. And It Is being done in your name. Nations all over the world are blaming YOU. How much longer arc you going to lolercto this satanic UN lio Jan horse on our shores which perverts our government, aids our enemies, destroys our friends, and kills helpless, in nocent people? L. C. Powell 318 S.E. Eighth A. Grants Pass, Ore. Taxes To the Editor: While the President is working for a cut In income tax to help the econ omy of the country Jackson county is raising taxes. A statement enme telling that the value of a home built in 194lhas Increased 25 per cent in value In the last six ye.irs (of course, they explained that thry have just discovered a error of 10 per cent that has been made during the past 22 years). There Is supposed to be a 6 per cent limitation on tax in crease in any year, but that means nothing - (or they can raise your valuation whatever they want. Although you ran prove to them that you have sold property in the same neighborhood for the same price it was purchased for 12 years ago. although It was in much better condition than when purchased, you are still told values have increased. A person used to be able to accumulate some rental prop erty to help provide for his retirement years, but such is not the case in Jackson county. The economy of the working man has not permit ted raising of rent while the taxes and up-keep keeps rais ing. Non-property owners are allowed to vote on bond issues to raise taxes they do not have to pay. As long as property taxes can be raised without limita tion you will not find any economy by the politicans. They have a pocket without a bottom to dip into, although the taxpayers are forced to keep trying to fill the pocket. The paper says the city of Medford has AGAIN hired a man for several hundred dol lars to come in and tell them how much wages they should pay the city employees. Do Ihe men who authorized this waste of tax money hire some one to tell them how much they should pay their em ployees? Medford belongs to the League of Oregon Cities. They can find out through that or ganization how much other cities are paying. A few years ago (having studied Medford city budgets for 30 years) I stopped in Salem and Eugene and for 20c I got a copy of the budgets of both cities. I found Medford was paying the same, or a little more, as those larger cities. A study of Medford budgets over the past 30 years shows a continual spread of pay be tween the department heads who pick up their orders at City Hall and the men to whom the work orders are re layed. This difference is out of reason. The politicians do not care about the property owners liv ing on Social Security, who much pay the tax. You get just what you vote for. Clco Canoose 55 Ross Court Medford What's a Bank? , To the Editor: Someone has said "a bank is a place to get money if you can prove you don't need it." I'd like to amend that state ment, as follows: "A bank is a place to get money, if you are prepared to go into court and prove you could get along a darned sight better without it." One can get credit to buy all manner of things which won't do him one tiniest bit of good but something you need well that is all but impossible. If you need a piece of equipment which . is un available in Oregon second (third or fourth) hand you must talk the owner Into al lowing you to bring it within the boundaries of Oregon be fore you can finance it. Floyd R. McCahe Mt. Pitt Slar Rt. Butte Falls, Ore. For Equal Justice To the Editor: I see by your paper that several readers have suggested that we who oppose the death penalty should write to the Governor and ask him not to permit the Freeman girl to be gassed to death. In her case we do not need to be against the death penally to do that. All of those who believe in equal Justice and a square deal (or the poor us well as Ihe rich, should also do that. There is more back of this case than has come to light. The only direct evidence against the Freeman girl (only 19 years of age when the crime was committed) was given by the mother o( the children who. in her confes sion when first arrested is quoted In the Redmond newt- paper May 25, 1961 as follows: "I planned the murder for three days" because "I loved them so much and could no longer support them"; "I said a little prayer over them"; "They are in Heaven now." Later on in open court Aug. 31, 1961 the mother said "I admit participating in my daughter's death." The moth er also pleaded "not guilty" on account of insanity and later was allowed to plead guilty to 2nd degree murder. She was not required to face a wrought up jury as the Free man girl was, nor did the Freeman girl's jury know at the time they handed down their sentence which meant death to the Freeman girl that the mother, comparative ly speaking, would be set free. I doubt very much that had this jury been informed of this, that all of them would have voted for the death sen tence for the Freeman girl. Certainly this young wom an had about as unprotected a home life as any young per son could have, and was de nied help for her ills by state agencies. She herself was raped by a man when she was only 4 years old. What effect this could have on a little girl's brain is not known. Let's all of us stand up and be counted on this important matter of equal justice. Let's write a letter to the Governor and make our sentiments known. It certainly would be no credit to Oregon to allow this execution to take place, and the notoriety we would re ceive would be of doubtful value and would not accomp lish any useful purpose, and would constitute jungle ven geance rather than civilized justice. Bert Jenkins Chairman of Commit tee Against Unequal Justice 6328 S. E. 67th St., Portland, Ore. Smoking To the Editor: A tobacco company sent packages of cig arettes to high school boys with this explanation, "We are sending you a package of our finest cigarettes, we hope you will use them to your satisfaction and want more." One of the boys wrote back: "I received the cigarettes and used them to my satisfaction. 1 steeped them in a quart of water and sprayed our bug infested rose bushes. Every bug died. These cigarettes are sure good poison. I want more next spring if we have more bugs." Also wc read of a small boy who was badly burned in a school house fire. The doc tor said he would never walk again. But through sheer grit, courage and prayer he did. Back in school he took up track, went to Madison Square Garden in N. Y., and thrilled multiplied thousands by his astonishing speed. They want ed him to try to break t h e world's record on an Indoor track. He agreed on one con dition and they agreed. He ran that mile In four minutes and four-tenths seconds, as a record that stood for many years. He was asked later what his condition was. "I'll run that race and beat it if you won't let anybody smoke a cigar, pipe or cigarette in that building before I start the race." He won. He is now Dr. Glenn Cunningham, Why should those who choose not to use tobacco be forced to inhale obnoxious nicotine-laden smoke, and at second hand? Can there be any justilicatmn for smokers preempting all the space in the world and polluting it with their smoke? Smokers should be courteous enough to realize that those who do not smoke have God given although there were differ ences with China, thi was an internal matter to be settled within the Communist bloc. No Change The 17-natlon Disarmament Conference resumes in Ge neva Jan. 15, with the chances for success even less than be fore. Russian sources are in- Strictly Personal By Sydney J. Harris (ci Field Enterpriiei, Inc. ON PRETENDED PATRIOTISM As I write these lines, the House Un-American Affairs committee is questioning members o f the "Women for P e a c e" movement trying to sniff out any pos sible Commu nist influence o r direction within the group. Harris No doubt, a few Commies will turn up in the ranks and so would a few vegetarians, Esperantists, nudists, Zen Buddhism devot ees, and a handful of Gold Star Mothers. But it has been my personal observation of the group in Chicago that 95 per cent of the "Women for Peace" are composed of ordinary Amer ican citizens, passionately con cerned about preserving peace, and better informed about what is happening in the world today than many Congressmen. Right or wrong and I happen to think they are more right than wrong these women are taking their responsibilities of cit izenship seriously; unlike the bulk of us, who awaken out of our torpor once every few years to vote, and then subside into self-centered-ness. What we desperately need are many more groups who are as earnestly con cerned with ihe world's plight, and who are making an effort to read, study, dis cuss and ventilate the basic problems facing human sur vival. Apathy, not "un Americanism," is our great est national enemy. - The House Un-American Activities Committee may have grasped a tiger by the tail this time. These women will not be intimidated; they have more moral cour age than most men, and they are not afraid for their jobs, at so many men are. Peace is everybody's bus iness. No one is sure exactly how we can achieve it; and, by the same token, every viewpoint must be explored and encouraged. It cannot be left to that abstraction called "the government," because a representative government such as ours is supposed to be responsive to the will of the people. But what is the "will of the people"? Most Americans are puzzled and confused and frightened. When government officials disagree, when scien tists disagree, when military strategists disagree then it is time for the people them selves to throw ..open the doors of discussion and in quiry to all who fear for the safety and survival of their children. In a part of his Farewell Address that is not usually quoted, George Washington warned us to "Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism." Some self-styled patriots today would like us to accept the "official line" on war and peace without ques tion and without dissent. To do so would be to abdicate our responsibilities as American citizens. And to suggest that such questioners and dissent ers are "un-American" is to make a vicious mockery of the democratic process itself. rights to the clean, pure air, untainted with exhalations. If they feel they must smoke should they not be willinc to do it where the smoke docs not reach the general public, especially in public buildings, hotels, restaurants, hospitals, buses, etc.? Is this too much to expect and demand on the part of non-smokers? Smokers are slowly com mitting suicide with the poi sons tobacco contains, along with Ihe arsenic spray the growers use to kill the horn worm. White metallic arsenic is used In a 7 per cent solu tion in cigarette papers. It prevents paper from going up in names. A cigar salesman admitted that arsenic and glycerine were used in cigars. but added "What people don't know won t hurt them." I dis agree. It does injure their health whether they know it or not, Mrs. Ernest Santo 204 Loztcr lane Medford. timating that Semyon K. Tsarapkin rather thun First Deputy Foreign Minister Vas- sill Kuzneisov will head the Soviet delegation. That's been an indication in the pas' that the Russians are not interest ed in progress. Tsarapkin is an expert at saying "no", and that in turn seems to mean no progress on on-site inspec tion of suspected nuclear test sites. Conflict at Bonn Bonn sources say a conflict may be building up between aging Chancellor Konrad Ade nauer and his youthful for eign minister, Gerhard Schroeder. These sources say Schrocder has two New Year goals - one, to bring West Germany's defense policy into line with Washington s drive for a build-up of conventional arms for NATO, and the other to aid Britain s entry into the Common Market. Adenauer is a firm supporter of the con cept of nuclear arms over conventional and hs been siding firmly with French President Charles de Gaulle on tough terms for British entry into the new Europe. Red Labor Tactics Observers in Frank f u r t, West Germany, expect the Communists to try to stir up labor trouble in West Ger many's still - booming indus tries with the hope of damag ing the national economy. Communist underground cells recently instigated small-scale wildcat strikes in the big Henschel locomotive and truck factories at Kassel. The Communist party was out lawed in West Germany in 1956. But' small Communist cells have never ceased op erating under ground. Washington Report By William S. White (c) United Feature Syndicate SENATOR KERR Washington A heavy po litical burden has been cast upon the official Democratic leadership of the Senate by the death of 1 1 s strongest, if untitled, as sociate, Sena tor Kerr of Oklahoma. The great question rais is whether the Whita leaacrsnip can sustain that balanced moder ation, that control over the shrill excesses of the left wing, which was the memor able service to party and country of Robert Samuel Kerr. His departure has struck the most punishing blow to responsible legislative con duct, in Congress as a whole, since a little more than a year ago Speaker Sam Rayburn of the House of Representatives preceded him in death. And, so far as the Senate individ ually is concerned, Kerr's loss is to the Democrats at least as grave as that suffered by the Republicans when Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio fell of cancer in ,1953. PRESIDENT Kennedy h i m self is both bereft and en dangered, even though Kerr was his own man rather than a Kennedy man. For while he sometimes opposed the Presi dent on welfare issues, nota bly medicare, he also helped arrange for him all his great est victories of the last Con gress, including the world trade expansion program. He was, in fact, more influ ential than the official hier archs of the Democratic party in the Senate Floor Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, and Assistant Floor Leader Hubert Humphrey of Minne sota. It was sometimes said that he was "the Senate's un crowned king," and that "what Kerr wants, Kennedy gets." These, however, were less exact judgments than reflec tions of the small envy of smaller men. Their real ob jections to Kerr were not that he was sometimes harsh and demanding, or even that he was unashamedly rich and al ways openly battling for the vital interests of his home state those dreadful things, "oil and gas." THEY resented him most of all because, for all his raw hide frontier tongue, he was demonstrably so much abler, so much more influential with the Senate generally, than they could ever be. Because he was all of these things a tough, tall live oak in a Senate forest where some of the trees are not very big he simply would not let the frantic left - wingers have their way, just as his old friend Vice President Lyn don Johnson would not let them have their way in his own time there. And they could never forgive his bril liance this man who scorn ed the pompous slogans of the ultra-liberals and the pseudo- -"intellectualism" of which tirelessly they prate. And it is because of his loss this loss of a moderate lead er of such skill and effective ness that the Democratic Senate now. sets out upon a sea of dangers. Without Kerr, Mansfield will have a sticky time fighting off the "de mands" of the ultra-liberals, whose incapacity to legislate effectively is only matched by their high capacity to maka mischief for those who can. If Mansfield fails, sensible moderation will be the victim, and a single result may be confidently predicted: A re vival of the old Republican Southern Democratic coalition against not simply liberal but also moderate legislation. THE Senate is a very human place where high human qualities are highly valued. Kerr had such qualities, and through them he sometimes held the southerners in lino for moderation where they would have preferred ultra conserva'ism. In the first place, it has not been easy at times for the southerners to follow this sort of leadership, in behalf of the Ideal of party unity, when their own political necessities at home have pointed in the opposite direction. That they have done so as often as they have done was a tribute to the persuasiveness of "Bob." Thus, if they begin to feel that Mansfield is surrender ing unduly to the left, there will be nothing left to keep them out of fairly frequent alliance with the Republicans. Gone, therefore, is more than a senator; gone, too, is a symbol and a great power of moderation. Dead is more than a man; dead, too, is a part of the embodied common sense of our times. BLAST CONGO ACTION Arlington, Va. -HIPD- Young Republicans have expressed "utter contempt" for United Nations activities in the Con go. The executive committee of the Virginia Young Repub lican Federation charged Sat urday that UN attempts to unitfy Katanga province with the central Congo government violated "the principle of self determination." "Watch her She might be one of those who think they can fight communism by putting stickers on the Polish hamt!"